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maanantai 20. elokuuta 2012

Polish and Scandinavian languages

Polish and Scandinavian languages

Yesterday
night we were sitting on bonfire here in Poland and talking about Polish
language (besides of the life in the other planets while looking at stars). My
Polish companions told me about how Polish language has many words similar to
Sanskrit, because people came from India to Poland and settled down in very
ancient history of the country. I can´t remember the similar words that he
mentioned, but Sarkar also writes about Polish language, so lets see what he
mentions:

The giving
of Sanskrit names is not only confined to India; in many countries outside India the
giving of names shows the influence of Sanskrit. At one time the Sanskrit
language was used throughout the vast region extending from southern Russia all the way
to Suvarńadviipa. The southern region of Russia – what is today Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan – used
to be called Shákadviipa…The name for Burma and all of southeast Asia was
Suvarńadviipa. Sanskrit is still used to speak with the king of Thailand,
however it is pronounced differently.

Amongst the
Caucasian languages, certain languages like Russian, Polish, Czech and Slovak
languages have been greatly influenced by Vedic vocabulary.

Other
languages greatly influenced by Latin
and Vedic were the languages spoken by the Alpine andNordic people. Polish
and Slovak are of Alpine origin, and they were also greatly influenced by Latin
and Vedic. They contain a certain percentage of the Scandinavian languages
which are of the Anglo-Saxon group. This group includes the countries of Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark and Iceland. Modern
English is a blending of Anglo-Saxon, Normandy French, which was spoken in the
northern portion of France, and Latin. French evolved from Oriental Demi-Latin.

The Latin family of languages has three
branches:
Continental Latin, Occido-Demi-Latin, and Oriento-Demi-Latin. Continental Latin
includes German, Czech, Hungarian, Polish, Finnish, and so on.
Occido-Demi-Latin includes two and a half – Spanish, Portuguese and Basque.
Basque can be called a half-language because it is a mixture of Portuguese and
Spanish. Oriento-Demi-Latin includes French and Italian. The Occido-Demi-Latin
languages have retained all of the Latin prefixes.

Today
Aryans can be divided into three groups - Nordic, Alpine and Mediterranean.
Nordic Aryans belong to Scandinavian countries and they have red complexions
and golden hair… The people who made their home in the Jammu part (India) were chiefly Alpine and
secondarily Nordic.

Teacher:
“You know, my boy, English is a blending of Latin and Scandinavian –
Anglo-Saxon terms and the Norman tongue. The Norman tongue follows Latinic
intonation and the Scandinavian tongues follow the Nordic or Anglo-Saxon style.
As per Scandinavian intonation, the pronunciation is ‘ejucation’. The Latin
pronunciation is ‘adukation’. The French pronunciation of education is
‘éducation’. ‘T’ is pronounced as ‘s’ in French.”… Modern English is a mixture
of Scottish, old Norman,
Anglo-Saxon, Brighton, Celt, Latin and Greek.

In Sanskrit
there is ph (ফ), but no f. Thus to spell words such as Fazal [a name], Finnish, fain,
kanif, and fraternal in the Sanskrit [alphabet] is impossible. Hence I am in
favour of putting one dot under the letter ফ in Sanskrit [ফ়] to indicate
the letter f.

……………..

This night
I was shocked to find a bat flying inside my room, it didn´t want to go out of
the window for some time, but at the end it flew out.

My
companions told there are also wolves around - besides many other more or less scary
beings….